Webber was 16-of-29 from the field, made both of his free throws
and also pulled down a game-high 12 rebounds for the Kings, who
won for the fourth time in five games and improved to 2-0
against Dallas this season.

"We just wanted to make sure we got this win," said Webber.
"It's a team that is in our division. They are a good team and
they have been playing well, so, you make yourself proud if you
beat a team at home and this is a very good team here."

Sacramento took control in the second quarter with Webber's
jumper giving it a 51-39 advantage with 7 1/2 minutes to go
before halftime. The Mavericks did not get closer than six
points the rest of the way.

"We were really ready to play today," said Kings coach Rick
Adelman. "I think we won that last game in Houston but we
really didn't play that well and we knew they had a
disappointing loss to Phoenix here. Our guys were ready to go.
This was a big one for us because this is one of the better
teams in the conference. It helps. It helps our confidence and
it helps us in the standings."

Peja Stojakovic and Jason Williams contributed 19 points apiece
for the Kings, who posted their third-highest point total of the
season.

"That's definitely something we feed off of. We've got a very
unselfish team on and off of the floor and I think we are so
unselfish off the floor that it carries on and is really a plus
for us," said Williams.

Dirk Nowitzki collected 28 points and 11 rebounds, Michael
Finley added 24 points and and Howard Eisley 23 with eight
assists for Dallas, which has not won at home since December 28.

"They (Kings) were clicking on all cylinders," said Mavericks
interim coach Donn Nelson. "They had the inside game and the
outside game. It didn't matter which poison we picked tonight,
they were making shots. We tried to change up the looks on
Chris Webber and as all great players do, he sniffed it out."

The Mavericks trailed 95-76 entering the final period before
using a 20-9 midway through the quarter to right within 106-100
on Nowitzki's 3-pointer with 2:21 remaining. But Stojakovic
answered with a jumper and Webber threw down a dunk as the
King's lead went back to 10 points with 89 seconds left.

Vlade Divac had 14 points and 11 rebounds and Doug Christie
added 14 points for the Kings, who connected on 55 percent
(45-of-82) of their shots, including 11-of-21 from beyond the
arc.

Sacramento, which led 65-58 at the break, basically put the game
out of reach by nearly doubling their halftime advantage in the
opening 4 1/2 minutes of the third quarter. Stojakovic's
25-footer put the Kings ahead, 77-64.

The Mavericks,, who committed 15 turnovers that led to 20
Sacramento points, shot just 44 percent (38-of-87) and was
11-of-26 from beyond the arc.

"Its bad, its real bad," Mavs forward Christian Laettner said of
the home-losing streak. "We go on the road for the next game,
maybe we can get one there (Charlotte). I just think we are
even more offensive minded at home. That just sets you up for
failing on the defensive end and not playing the right way. You
can't outscore people every night, you've got to play some
defense."